Weight Loss
Weight Gain in the Historical Context
Weight Loss – General Discussion
In order to fully understand weight loss, it is necessary to first understand the underlying causes of weight gain.
Multiple factors in the modern lifestyle appear to play causal roles in weight gain. Generally speaking, populations in developed countries lead sedentary lives and overconsume calorie-dense foods. In particular, refined carbohydrates negatively impact metabolism and stimulate brain mechanisms, which facilitate weight gain.
As fat tissue mass accumulates, fullness sensors in the brain’s hypothalamus become resistant to insulin and leptin, which leads to increased calorie consumption.
Several behavioral issues further contribute to weight gain, such as eating too quickly, insufficient sleep, high stress levels, and a lack of exercise. Finally, fat tissue accumulation changes the body weight set point, which leads to metabolic changes that resist weight loss efforts. Each of these factors work together to cause weight gain and promote obesity.
Although more than two-thirds of U.S. adults are overweight, almost one-third of the population does maintain proper body weight; so, it is obvious that normal weight an achievable goal well worth pursuing. Obesity puts one at high risk for developing diseases and is therefore a major controllable risk factor.
Any weight loss plan should include avoiding refined carbohydrates and high fat foods and eating large quantities of whole food to achieve and maintain proper weight while still maintaining a sense of fullness.
The most successful weight loss- weight management studies have been those that include a daily exercise regimen. Successful weight loss studies that use weight management supplements also include an exercise program of some type.
Weight Gain in the Historical Context
Before the modern era, we had to search for food by hunting, foraging, and farming, which began only about 10,000 years ago. Substantial calories were expended during the laboring process for food as well as building habitats for survival against the elements.
Evolution takes place on a much longer time scale, however. During these early times, calorie-dense foods such as refined carbohydrates, processed and fast foods were unavailable. Humans subsisted on natural foods, such as wild game, fish, fruits and vegetables that they could harvest growing in the wild. The natural selection process that took place over hundreds of thousands of years caused humans to be genetically adapted to be hunter-gatherers, while pursuing game over great distances.
Hunter-gatherers were lean and obesity was a luxury that was virtually nonexistent. Our modern sedentary lifestyle is a strange and unhealthy experience from the perspective of our inherited genetic physiological needs. Weight gain and obesity then can be viewed as an unavoidable consequence when humans switched over, on a relatively short time scale, from an active to a sedentary lifestyle and went on to consume previously unavailable calorie-dense foods.
This is, in fact, what has happened to modern man and is the best overall hypothesis to explain the overweight and obesity global epidemic we are now experiencing.